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RS2 |
Yet another good week, which started
off with Dambwa Research on Monday, followed by working to plant maize seeds in
the garden. Research was good - the release site has become so green since I
was last in there! The lions were lying in the road right by the fence, so we
actually didn’t go in for the first session, but instead just watched them
through the fence. As usual, my lion just slept the entire way through our
activity budget, but some of the others moved around. There was a particularly
cute moment, when Zulu the pride male got up and went to greet RS2, his oldest
son. The higher the pride status of a lion, the more greetings they will
receive, so seeing the ‘boss’ greeting his son shows the possible startings of
a shift in power from father to son. On the other hand, it could also be a nice
friendly “Hi son”! The afternoon we were planting maize in the garden, which
involved using the pickaxe to dig a hole, and then putting 2 seeds in each one.
I only dug a few holes - the axe is super heavy and it was really hot, so the
handlers wouldn’t let us do much! Still it was good fun, and hopefully in a few
months time there should be a nice healthy crop of maize ready. I’m not 100%
sure what it will be used for, but at least some of it will go to the schools
for the children’s lunches, so they can concentrate better in class.
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The Dambwa Sub-adults |
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Harry, M151 |
Tuesday
was a far less interesting day - elephant IDs all morning, followed by lesson
plan in the afternoon. The funny part was being peed on by a vervet monkey
during breakfast…! Elephant IDs have been very productive this week, getting
through a decent number of photos, and making a lot of new ID cards. Hopefully
that doesn’t mean we’re just missing the elephants we’ve already got and making
lots of duplicates! We did find a duplicate of Squank, who is one of our most
obvious elephants thanks to the large notch in his left ear, and his almost
perpendicular tusks! Oops! Lesson plan for Conservation Education was very
quick and simple, as the lesson was cancelled last week so we already had
everything prepared. However, when we arrived on Wednesday, there was no
children - the school teacher had forgotten and sent the children home at the
end of their exam. To be honest, I’m not sure they would have been concentrating
after their exam anyway. It just meant that we joined the others on lion
feeding and cleaning out on Wednesday afternoon instead. Wednesday morning was
our very last trees session - all the plots are now done so we’re ready to
start insect research. This turned out to be another particularly amusing
session, as the plot a small gorge running through it, which we had to
navigate, and at times balance on the edge of trying to measure the trees!
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Pubescent Female with a calf - probably her sister |
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Squank, M40 |
Thursday
was back to elephant research, and my usual problem surfaced very badly… I took
618 photos in one afternoon…! AAH! SO many to sort through… But the reason for
that many? Record breaking number of elephants! We saw 102+, of which 5 were in
1 herd, and 97+ were in the other! It was such an incredible sight, and we just
kept finding more. Of course in that group there were quite a few that we could
recognise straight off too. Unfortunately, there wasn’t time for us to wait and
watch them cross the road, so we only saw the first 23 really properly with no trees
in front of us. Shame, but unavoidable. The most interesting part was that we
saw, 2 days in a row, an adult male elephant with a calf. ALERT has never seen
that before, and it’s really interesting to theorise why, though sadly we won’t
be able to confirm any of them.
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The Snare Sweep Team |
Snare
sweep on Friday morning we only found 15 snares, but it was still good fun and
included a very boggy bit to jump through! The ALERT researcher who is normally
in charge of taking photos of snare sweep wasn’t able to come this week, so he
asked me to do it. I realised as I was that while I have however many thousand
photos of animals in the park, I actually have virtually nothing of the park
itself! Thanks to snare sweep, I have now corrected that.
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Playing the ball-through-the-legs game at Kids Club |
The
final activity of my week was Kids Club on Saturday. Due to some financial
difficulties, there has been some significant disruption to scheduling, so we
had no lesson planned this week. Instead, we spent the entire 2.5 hours just
playing games with the kids. We started off with volleyball, which was good
fun, but it seems that 2 weeks is plenty long enough to forget we taught them
last time! Hopefully they’ll still remember by next time. We stopped after
about an hour as the net position meant we had to be in the sun a lot and it
was getting far too hot! Moving into the shade of a tree we played broken
bottle (essentially catch but where you have to do various things which makes
it harder and harder to catch again if you miss it), duck-duck-goose, limbo,
skipping, and a game that they introduced us to, where you stand in a circle
with your legs apart, and you have to try to whack a ball through other
people’s ‘goals’. If you succeed, then they have to first only use one hand,
then turn around and do it looking through their legs, then do it backwards
with only one hand! I didn’t win, but I was the last standing mzungu so not
bad! We had a half day on Saturday so we had lunch then headed back to
Serenity, before I went with 3 of the volunteers to the pool at David
Livingstone, That place really is a God-send on a hot and humid day! We spent 3
hours there on Sunday too!
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